Of Pirates, Pioneers, And Being Heard

As he stood before me, he nodded somewhat unwillingly. “Okay, fine. Just one picture…”

Chase was going to “his hospital”, and he was going as a pirate.  Because nothing says “this is who I am” like a pirate costume. Due to a slight cold, I would not be joining them on the oncology floor that day and so it was extra special because it was “time for just Chase and Daddy” – the very best.

Occasionally, I drop hints in my writing about Chase’s aggression and I have trouble doing much more than that for several reasons.  I think mostly because there is rarely any redemption or beauty that would benefit you from reading about it in greater detail. It is sad and ugly and Chase is deeply ashamed of it. Whenever we talk about what happened during his angry moments, he dissolves into genuine tears, promising never ever to do it again.

And so, there has become this other quiet side to our lives that in some way seems less real because I don’t write or talk about it the same as I do other facets, and yet, it is extremely real and taxing in our home and on our family.  

Over the years, Bob and I have experienced shock and judgement on the occasions when Chase’s struggle rears it’s head in public.  There are comments and suggestions, and the response that always breaks me a little: tears and the quietly whispered aside – “I don’t know what to say but I’ll pray”.  I think I’d say that same thing to me if I were seeing it from the outside for the first time too. 

And over the years, as people have witnessed the struggle in hospital and out, we’ve been told that we as parents were overindulgent and we must be spoiling him, that Chase needed boundaries, that he needed more control over life choices, that we were giving him too many choices, that we weren’t treating him normally, that we were treating him too normally, that the anger was his reaction to the out-of-control-ness of life in cancer treatment, that it might be the anti seizure medication he takes every day, that it stemmed from anxiety, that we needed to change his diet, that we needed to change his supplements, that we needed to change his environment, that it could be circumstantial, and various other things.

One of the hard, out of control moments
One of the hard, out of control moments

We’ve thought many times about getting help for him, but weren’t even sure what “help” should look like or who should provide it.  We were often told that he was too young and his brain was still developing too much for anything to be of assistance, and were even told at one point that some specialists had no paradigm for a child who’d been through the extreme brain and emotional trauma that Chase had experienced.  It was as if everybody knew on some level that it was happening, but nobody knew how to deal with it or what was at it’s root.  A very isolating feeling.

Hearing that it was something we were doing was especially difficult. In the first week that Chase was diagnosed, Bob and I had determined that one of the very best gifts that we could give him was the gift of normal.  His life had become extraordinary and we desired to keep that out of his way as much as we could, and so, we instituted loving boundaries in and around the chemo and treatment.  How do you give a “time out” to a child whose life is a giant hospital bed punishment? You can’t… but maybe if a toy got thrown in anger, then the toy went into time out for a few minutes. Small things like that – the things that made him like his brothers and sister, like the other kids outside the hospital walls.  But it was a constantly changing situation in which we were (and still are) always having to weigh out what’s chemo damage, what’s tumor damage, and what’s Chase. It was during this early season that I found the phrase I love so well: “There are only so many hills you can die on.” But despite our efforts, the rages continued unchecked. We felt like we were doing everything good parents were supposed to do. How was this our fault?

We plunged forward and fought these fights ever week and sometimes every day, and yet, we’ve felt largely unheard.  Not because anybody’s ignoring us, but because I truly believe that the pediatric cancer survivor field is still significantly unfolding in this area. Think about it: Chase’s cancer has only been defined by name for about twenty years and it’s only been about seven since his treatment began as a clinical trial, changing statistics from completely terminal to marginally terminal, and suddenly, Chase’s generation of survivors are living long enough to really see what happens after the dust settles.  Some days, our lives feels like the cancer equivalent of the old Oregon Trail – where we just circle up the wagons and try to survive. 

Bob and I often liken Chase and his treatment to a house fire. When he  was rushed in with his large mass, he was a house consumed. The teams of doctors were almost like teams of fire fighters, working collectively to extinguish the deadly blaze on all levels. You do what you have to do to save.  And then we were done and thankful… But, who helps rebuild the house?  You can’t expect the firefighters to do that for you.  

Chase works with a occupational therapist during chemotherapy
Chase works with a occupational therapist during chemotherapy [photo credit: Cameron Dantley]

This is ultimately what lead to Chase going to the hospital as a pirate this cold winter morning – we were on a search for builders – master builders. (Sorry, this is what happens when you’ve watched The Lego Movie a couple hundred times with your kids) It was time to work at rebuilding and Chase’s primary team of doctors had recommended that he was now old enough for a neuropsychology evaluation.  We were cautiously optimistic, having been warned that it may not explain his aggression, but would definitely show some of his strengths, weaknesses, and how he learned.  But we could still hope. Maybe there would be something – anything – that could provide us with a clue as to how we could help him.

And so it began, hours of testing, piles of paperwork, and then a two hour meeting for which I was conferenced in. And Chase sat in the back of the doctor’s office and over the speaker on Bob’s phone, I could hear Matt Redman singing “10,000 Reasons” from the iPad. Some things never change. But what we learned in the meeting was both life changing and life amazing.

I marvel how so many cancer parents know exactly where their child’s tumor was located in the brain.  I am not one of those parents. I asked some other crazy and weird stuff at the time of his diagnosis, but I never asked exactly where the tumor was located. At 6cm with midline shift and tumor cell metastasis, it seemed to be everywhere.  Which is why it stopped me dead in my tracks to realize for the first time in three years that Chase’s tumor decimated his language center.  Did you hear that? Chase shouldn’t be able to talk.  I need to say that again because I want it to really sink in.  Chase shouldn’t be able to talk.  Those of you who have met Chase know the truth, and I’d like to think that through this blog, even those of you who haven’t met Chase know the truth.  Chase talks.  Oh my word, does he talk! And well, too. So take just a moment and breathe in this insane miracle of a brain that, freshly cut and traumatized, made the decision to move knowledge to a safer area, and compensating for itself, retained power of speech even after hours of being open on an operating table. God is good.

But the damage and the compensation and the radiation all carried a price and it had to come from somewhere. In this meeting, we found out that it had been taken out of a few areas, including Chase’s executive functions – his emotional regulation.  

What followed were long and breath-taking explanations in which instance upon encounter began to click into focus and understanding for us, and several times, I was tempted to burst into tears on the conferenced call just because the meeting was the most incredible revelation.  

There are only so many times you can be told that you’re doing something wrong as a parent before you begin to believe it, and this meeting was the first time in a very long time that it was acknowledged and known beyond a shadow of a doubt that Chase’s aggression isn’t due to something we’re doing or not doing. There is damage, it is real, and we learned that there might actually be ways to heal, or at the very least, help.

There is not a magic cure. The process of working with a traumatized brain like Chase’s is a life-long one.  There will be more therapies, more meetings, and possibly even medication to help retrain and replace some of what has been lost.  And this will change and grow as Chase changes and grows.  

So why do I share all of this?  First, because if someone had told me three years ago that survival would be this complicated, I wouldn’t have believed them.  And there are a lot of struggling survivors around almost all of us, so look to them with understanding and grace.  Second, neurological issues are often simple in their exhibited symptoms yet mind-blowing in their actual complexity. So, the next time you’re in a store and you watch a mom deal with a screaming, wailing, kicking, on-the-floor child, know in your own heart and mind that it could indeed be an issue of boundaries and you might do something different if it were your child…or it could be that her child’s shirt hides multiple port scars and his hat covers a giant resection scar and that mama is dying just a tiny bit inside because she doesn’t know why he’s on the ground, what made the anger so great over something so small. And as you watch her, know that she’s been to places that broke her and she’s being broken once again in the aisles of a store and she wishes for just a second that things were different.

We are so deeply thankful because, three years ago, we didn’t even know if Chase would live let alone function, but we are weary parents, and the bald pirate has a long road of work ahead. So we rely on neurological sciences, survivor breakthroughs, and prayer – knowing that our seemingly accidental stumbling through it all is part of a good and hope-filled master plan. And we begin yet another facet of this life . . . moment by moment.   

“…More than 95% of survivors will have a chronic health problem and 80% will have severe or life-threatening conditions.” – St. Baldrick’s Foundation

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Scars and Justice

He walked into the room and sighed loud and long, his little way of reminding me that he was here and waiting to be noticed.

Turning from making the bed, I acknowledged him.

“Hey, Chasey-bear, what’s up?”

With hands at his sides and head lowered, he spoke the words, “Today on the bus.”

I waited for a second and when nothing followed, I bent into his pattern, pieces of a sentence stated, pieces of a sentence repeated. This is his way.  “Today on the bus?”

“Yes. Ian and Aden.”

“Ian and Aden?”

They said I was short and they made fun of me for being so tiny.”

I stopped still. 

How do you react when you want to be justice for your children and it’s already too late?

The words were already said and heard. “Oh sweet boy . . . what did you do? What did you say?

He hung his head, but his voice was steady. “I did not yell and I did not scream.”

“Not even a bit?” I tried to see his face.

“Nope. No screaming.” He put a hand to his chest. “But my heart.”

“Your heart?”

His dropped again. The single word burning as he spoke: “Hurts.”

Some days the truth is not spoken lovingly, but hurled like a weapon and it stings.

How do you prepare a child to stand strong when all that makes him beautiful stands out differently from the children around him? 

It will take a great deal of strength to meet these thrown words with grace.  And he will need to do it often, I’m sure.  I’ve seen how the other children look at him on the playground, and I hear them ask simple and honest “Why doesn’t he have hair like us?” They cannot know that their simplicity is painful because it’s complicated for us.

It’s funny how we want to be proud of our scars, but we’re still keenly aware of their unique quality and it bothers us. It’s too easy to compare, come up short, and sometimes even lash out as we feel our own differences.

This day, Chase succeeded.  He did not scream – a huge victory for my small boy, I know. There will be times to speak up, but this day, it was better to be quiet.  

And at the end of it, I don’t care how far off the ground his head stands; he can hold it high because he did the right thing.

Moment by moment.

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The Past, The Present, And A Virus

Chase is not known for sleeping.  Since the time the tumor first started growing when he was two, he often struggles to fall asleep at night and wakes long before the sun. From the moment his feet hit the floor, he’s going, doing, and often messing around.  

When he got off the bus on Tuesday afternoon, he didn’t ask to play outside, but came in quietly, telling me he loved me and missed me.  Don’t get me wrong – a docile, loving Chase is wonderful, but it’s also unusual.  Most often, he walks to the door fighting to stay outside with a verbal list of all the things he wants and needs to do as he hits the front stairs.  That night, as we sat down for family reading time, he laid his head on my lap and fell asleep . . .and then he slept ’til 6:30 in the morning.  When he woke, he did not speak much, but went back to his room almost immediately, laying curled in a blanket on the end of the bed. Within minutes, he was asleep again.

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My philosophy in a household of small children (read: boys) is “Fear The Silence” because it usually brings no good, and for Chase, this holds ten times as true.  He is never still unless something is wrong.  This child who sat at the breakfast table next to siblings without eating or talking – for twenty whole minutes – he looked like my child (only more pale), but I couldn’t find the pulse of his personality and that was terrifying.

Is there an increase in pressure within his skull?

Is something growing?

Is his speech changed?

Is he unsteady on his feet?

Does he seem cognizant of his surroundings and memories?

Could his hemoglobin have dropped?

Is he having any muscle tremors or signs of seizures?

Does his head hurt?

These are just a few of the well-worn panic paths my brain circles as I move into the routine of checking his forehead, looking down his throat, and asking where it hurts.  

It’s quite likely that Chase was just under a hint of a virus.  That’s another part of who he is.  The other kids get crabby or possibly lose their appetite when they get sick, but Chase . . . Chase gets “neuro”. His speech and sleep patterns change and he often grows even less tolerant than normal – all over something as simple as a runny nose.  

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And me? I worry.  That is my damage. I may stand still and breathe deep, but in my mind, I’m all-out sprinting across nightmare trails.  The years old sentence: “There’s a large mass” opened the gates wide to every conceivable worry – and often with good reason.  So once again, I ripped into the past to justify my present and by 9:00 in the morning, I was mentally on the ground, gasping for a saving thought or grace.

“Be anxious for nothing” – Yes, it’s in the Bible and sometimes I don’t know why because sometimes it feels unmercifully impossible.  But like every other word in there, it has purpose and it cheers me greatly to think that God put it in there because He knew we’d struggle.  And how I struggle.    

This morning, Chase beat the sun by a good half hour and was back to his doing, going, and messing self, boarding the bus with a smile.  It was most likely just a little virus.  

And for me, there’s the quiet, hard knowledge that there is no end in sight. At this point, the only best cure for cancer and worry is heaven. I’ll probably go back to his diagnosis every single time something is even slightly off and I’ll worry myself up until I’m panicking on the ground again and hate myself for it.

And then I’ll need to hand it over once again, give it up to God who knows and loves, and wait in the grace of the . . .Moment by moment.

“Surely your goodness and unfailing love will pursue me all the days of my life.” Psalm 23:6a

Being Still

“We have working hands.”  

I grew up believing that the busy person is the most productive person and being still should not come until all the work is done.  All of it.

How I love it … And how it kills me a little every day when I fall terribly far short of all that needs to be done.

One afternoon not long ago, I stood at the front window, looking out over the front yard. A small boy in his puffy blue winter coat and red Spider-Man hat methodically lifted chunks of snow and ice off the grass, stacking them neatly in a pile on the sidewalk.  

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My daily routine suggests that the kids should get off the school bus, unpack their back packs, do any necessary homework or house chores, and then we stop to take a breath.  My joy is in the “getting it done”.

Whether it’s personality, brain injury, or both, Chase can’t always handle the constant movement and input that comes with my style of productivity.  To him, it is a vicious bombardment. And in those times where his brain shuts down as my parental arrogance revs up, the two of us struggle over every single thing.  My home becomes a battleground littered most pointedly with aborted teachable moments. 

So, that afternoon, when he asked me if he could play outside after the bus pulled away, I could feel the struggle. I wanted him to come in and keep going. I wanted to be somewhere other than standing at the window watching to make sure he was safe and well. I didn’t want to be still. But I said yes.

This is one way Chase helps me.

Because of who he is and how he best functions, I am forced to weigh down the moments and consider each interaction so very carefully — even more than I do with my other children. (though in all fairness, I should do it with them as well)

Do I ask Chase to do something because it is right, or do I ask him to do something because it is right for me?

Productivity is wonderful, thoughtful dialogue and parent-child boundaries are so necessary, and there will always be moments when we’ll need to do battle, but that winter afternoon was not one.  For my desire to say no stemmed not from his best interest, but from mine.

So I stood at the window with my tea, taking a deep breath and actually looking around me as I stepped out of the hurry for a time.  And then he looked up at me and grinned and I could see that what had felt like a compromise to me had actually been a great victory.  

Sometimes being still is the most active thing we can possibly do.

Moment by moment.